Mabo myths

Michael Connor

Jun 03 2012

2 mins


On the 20th anniversary of the Mabo decision they are still pretending that terra nullius was part of our colonial history – it wasn’t.


Terra nullius was a badly understood phrase from international law theory that was thrown into our history books and law rhetoric for political reasons. The Mabo decision was bad history, bad law.

The beginnings of the Mabo Case are acknowledged to be a land rights conference held in Townsville in 1981. It was there, where the decision was made to follow the white lawyers’ path forward, that historian Henry Reynolds suggested using violence to obtain land rights. This is from Chapter Two of The Invention of Terra Nullius:

To get his own way Henry Reynolds, a child of the middle classes, whose personal experiences of warfare had included such dangerous activities as writing spiky letters to the editor of the Townsville Bulletin, advocated unleashing military force and possible civil war on Australia. His comfortable life style, his publishing, his university career, with enviable long stretches of leave to undertake research, were based on exposing past brutality yet he was prepared to bring violence into the present:

If it has to be by force, by using the army, as the Federal government in Washington had to do, I’d accept that. If necessary you could parachute them in and take over the reserves. That wouldn’t concern me one bit, except that if that is the only way, it also means that you are going to move far more quickly than the Queensland public can accept and you will create a backlash. You will create enormous support for the Premier.

Read about the Townsville conference (pdf) here…


See also:

The Invention of Terra Nullius here…

Nulliusgate: the war on a book (Kindle edition) here…

 

Michael Connor

Michael Connor

Contributing Editor, Theatre

Michael Connor

Contributing Editor, Theatre

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